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      Exceptionally high density of NUMTs in the honeybee genome.

      Molecular Biology and Evolution
      Animals, Anopheles gambiae, genetics, Bees, Cell Nucleus, DNA, Mitochondrial, Drosophila melanogaster, Genome, Insect, Tribolium

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          Abstract

          The available genome sequences of 4 insects (the fruit fly, the African malaria mosquito, the flour beetle, and the honeybee) are used to compare the amount of mitochondrial DNA transferred to the nuclear genome (NUMTs). The data from the beetle and the bee show frequent transfer of NUMTs, whereas NUMTs in the 2 other insects are rare. The density of NUMTs in the honeybee (>1.0 bp transferred DNA per 1 kb of the nuclear sequence) is the highest in any animal studied, about ten times higher than in humans and comparable to the densities in plant genomes. The density of NUMTs in the beetle (0.056 bp/kb) is of the same order of magnitude as that in humans. The analysis of the honeybee genome indicates that NUMTs originate from all parts of the mitochondrial genome, that about two-thirds of the nuclear copies result from secondary transpositions within the nuclear genome, that the copies are significantly associated to "mariner" type transposons, and that the NUMTs consist mainly of short and fragmented copies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          17383971
          10.1093/molbev/msm055

          Chemistry
          Animals,Anopheles gambiae,genetics,Bees,Cell Nucleus,DNA, Mitochondrial,Drosophila melanogaster,Genome, Insect,Tribolium

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